Quote from tradestrong:
Just imagine that you find a niche for a new business. All it requires is a rubberband and a quarter. No skills needed...only your time and your relatively small resources. Guess what will happen to your "monopoly"?
...it will be duplicated by the first "idiot" to come along...and fast...
Now imagine...you have a business which requires your ability to program software...invent new products...etc. Now how fast will you be duplicated?
...I bet it won't be duplicated by the same idiot that duplicated your rubber band business.![]()
That's my point. It's impossible to protect a resource that your 90 year old grandmother could duplicate if she wanted. Our resources should be spent on developing technology and skills that are very hard to duplicate. That is what will keep America strong going forward. Who cares if China now knows how to bend steel. Our Apple, Microsoft, Intel, Cisco, Amazon, IBM, Google...etc...etc...etc is where our future is in America. And I'd say we're doing pretty well.
And yes...this does mean a class will be left behind. That's life.
The problem is that not everyone can be taught to be a techie at Apple, Microsoft, Intel, Cisco, Amazon, IBM, Google...etc...etc...etc, but everyone can be taught to bend steel.
The technology sector is great to have, but because only a small percentage of your population can do it, it's not enough to base an entire economy on.